Quantcast

Stories by The Northern California Record on Northern California Record

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA RECORD

Friday, November 29, 2024

The Northern California Record News


Federal judge compares litigation about social-media addiction to landmark tobacco lawsuits

By Michael Carroll |
A California federal judge who is overseeing multidistrict litigation alleging that social media companies’ platforms lead to addictive behavior among youths has likened these cases to the multibillion-dollar tobacco settlement of 1998.

Private Equity International Awards 2023

By The Northern California Record |
Kirkland & Ellis won the following nine awards at the 2023 Private Equity International (PEI) Awards.

Class action accuses Dignity Health over alleged refusal to reimburse managers' cell phone, home internet bills

By Northern California Record |
The lawsuit asserts the alleged non-reimbursements amount to violations of California labor law.

Class action accuses CNN of allegedly installing trackers on devices used to access its site

By Northern California Record |
The lawsuit could ultimately include a class of hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of visitors to CNN's website, each of whom could demand $5,000 per alleged violation of a California privacy law.

Class action: OpenAI should pay for 'scraping' data to train GPT AI, come under outside control

By Jonathan Bilyk |
A lawsuit filed in San Francisco federal court asserts OpenAI has violated privacy laws in developing its GPT group of AIs, while allegedly disregarding safeguards that take into consideration the risk of its AIs to humanity

Troutman Pepper Releases D&O and Professional Liability 2023 Year in Review

By The Northern California Record |
A new report by Troutman Pepper spotlights nearly 100 impactful court decisions from the past year in the directors and officers and professional liability insurance arenas.

Excessive litigation contributes to California’s high cost of living

By A. I. Benavidez |
California, known for its high cost of living, also has the highest poverty rate in the nation. A significant factor contributing to these high costs is a large volume of litigation, which escalates insurance costs for policyholders.

Prop E appears poised to pass, giving police more ability to fight crime in SF

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The ballot measure would loosen restrictions on officers' ability to pursue criminal suspects; allow for police leadership to have a greater say in future policy changes; and enable police to use tech, including drones and surveillance cameras, to patrol in high-crime areas.

Insurance, inflation impose regressive tax increase on Californians

By D. L. Deener |
A recent report from Insurify reveals that car insurance costs, after surging by 24% last year, are projected to increase by another 7% in 2024. This escalating cost of car insurance is outstripping inflation and is particularly burdensome for low-income drivers.

Objectors to Sacramento marijuana shop owner residency rule win chance to press constitutional claims

By Jonathan Bilyk |
A federal appeals panel ruled that a federal district judge had wrongly attempted to duck the thorny constitutional questions by citing the deep conflict between federal and California state marijuana laws

Lime bike and scooter rental app operators accused in class action of improperly dinging customer debit, credit cards

By Northern California Record |
The lawsuit asserts Neutron Holdings has allegedly charged customers with unauthorized recurring fees, allegedly in violation of federal and California laws.

Ex-Twitter execs sue Musk over severance they say he improperly denied after ousting them

By Northern California Record |
Ex-Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal and other former top Twitter executives say Musk has illegally withheld $200 million in severance benefits from them out of revenge

Low-income Californians hurt by rising car insurance costs

By J. D. Suayan |
A recent report by the Insurance Information Institute (III) suggests that excessive litigation is driving up car insurance costs for consumers. Low-income and minority Californians are particularly affected by these rising prices.

CA Supreme Court says car buyers can demand to keep trade-in credits under 'lemon law' verdicts

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Automaker Stellantis/FCA had argued such a ruling would essentially allow car buyers to profit when they buy defective cars, trade them in toward the purchase of other vehicles, and then sue under the lemon law for a full refund.

Clients Nominate 61 Greenberg Traurig Attorneys to Thomson Reuters Stand-out Lawyers Program

By The Northern California Record |
Clients of global law firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP have nominated 61 attorneys to the Thomson Reuters Stand-out Lawyers list, the results of its Sharplegal study.

San Francisco Juneteenth organization sues AAACC over allegedly withheld grant money owed to them

By Northern California Record |
The lawsuit marks a low point in the relationship between the two organizations, which formerly partnered to produce San Francisco's Juneteenth celebration.

Class action targets Rodan+Fields for allegedly misclassifying online sales consultants as independent contractors

By Northern California Record |
The lawsuit claims the MLM skincare seller should be paying and treating its salesforce as employees, not MLM contractors.

Years of Litigation in High-Profile Defamation Case End with Favorable Result

By The Northern California Record |
A BakerHostetler trial team achieved a significant victory in D.C. Superior Court on Feb. 8, 2024, following a nearly four-week jury trial for a defamation case that has garnered substantial media coverage.

Private Debt Investor Awards 2023

By The Northern California Record |
Kirkland & Ellis won the following awards at the 2023 Private Debt Investor (PDI) Awards.

Musk sues Altman, OpenAI, in legal fight over future of AI now allegedly under Microsoft's control

By Northern California Record |
The lawsuit asserts Altman and Microsoft teamed up to seize control of OpenAI, which Musk asserts is contractually bound to only develop AI tech that is open to the public and is "for the good of humanity."